Shans who had held a highly successful forum in November are now
moving forward to hold a Shan State conference in March which is
expected to be joined by parties from the neighboring Kayah State,
according to Sai Lake, spokesperson for the Shan Nationalities League
for Democracy (SNLD) from Lashio yesterday.

“Shan and Kayah states have a long history of friendly coexistence
and cooperation,” he said. “Parties there have also requested not to
move ahead without them.”

Mongpai (also known as Moebye) and Faikhun (better known as Pekhon)
in Shan State are made up of races of Kayah descent. Parties like Kayan
New Land Party (KNLP) and Kayan National Party (KNP), in fact, are more
active in Shan State than in Kayah.

Other Kayah-based parties that have made the request included Karenni
National Progress Party (KNPP), Karenni Nationalities Peoples
Liberation Front (KNPLF), Karenni National Solidarity Organization
(KNSO) and Karenni Nationalities Peoples Development Party (KNPDP).

SNLD
delegation headed by General Secretary Sai Nyunt Lwin with Kokang
Democracy and Unity Party (KNUP) leaders, after meeting in Lashio on 28
December 2012. (Photo: SNLD)

(The KNPP is a splinter group from its mother movement that signed a ceasefire agreement with Naypyitaw on 7 March 2012)

Yesterday’s meeting in Lashio, participated by 9 parties, had reached
agreement to hold the conference in the first week of March. A
conference organizing committee made up of 3 from SNLD and 1 each from 8
other parties have also been formed. They are:

Danu Nationalities Democracy Party (DNDP)

Inn National Development Party (INDP)

Kayan National Party (KNP)

Kayan New Land Party (KNLP)

Kokang Democracy and Unity Party (KDUP)

Shan State Kokang Democratic Party (SSKDP)

Shan State Progress Party (SSPP)

Wa National Unity Party (WNUP)

The organizing committee is planning to make the conference an
inclusive one, Sai Lake added. “We need to include remaining groups (in
Shan State and Kayah State) in order to establish a common political
stand,” he said.

The Shan-Kayah cooperation in 1960 had led to the interstate
conference in 1961 that called for amendment to the 1947 “federal in
form, unitary in substance” constitution. The two year gamble ended with
the military takeover in 1962.